When I’m en­gaged in work I bring a whole lot of in­ten­si­ty; not sig­nif­i­cant­ly less than a few decades ago, I think. But at
the end of the day, man, I’m so tired. Some days I can hard­ly scare up evening con­ver­sa­tion with the fam­i­ly.

I want to write a tru­ly great Twit­ter client for An­droid Au­to, to keep me in­formed as I cruise down the road.

I want to start work­ing full-time on AR now so that I’ll have some­thing cool run­ning when the hard­ware be­comes plau­si­ble. I
have a cou­ple of fab­u­lous app ideas; noth­ing that would make any mon­ey, but I’m OK with that.

Rea­sons to keep work­ing ·

I get to write soft­ware that fil­ters and routes a mil­lion mes­sages a sec­ond.

I’m in a po­si­tion where it’s re­al­ly hard for peo­ple not to lis­ten to my opin­ions about tech­nol­o­gy. I’d be­come
amaz­ing­ly un­in­ter­est­ing about fif­teen sec­onds af­ter re­tir­ing.

I like com­put­er­s, and so it makes sense to work for (what I as­sume must be) the world’s largest provider of com­put­ers to
peo­ple and busi­ness­es who use them.

I get a chance to move the needle, a lit­tle, on the way peo­ple use com­put­er­s.

The peo­ple at work are in­ter­est­ing and nice; ba­si­cal­ly none of them get on my nerves.

I learn things all the time about how to think about how to use com­put­er­s.

The Van­cou­ver tech scene needs an an­chor ten­ant and it’s cool to be help­ing build one.

The money’s good.

When my Dad re­tired, he re­al­ly hadn’t made any plans for what he was go­ing to do with
his time, so he didn’t do much, and that was bad; he went down­hill re­al­ly fast. I don’t have plans enough just yet to hit that Eject but­ton.

Here is another reason to consider: if you have things you want to do with people you love that do not involve work, you have no guarantees that you or they will live long enough and be healthy enough to do them, when you decide to hang it up.

If your wife or kids or whomever you are living your life with suddenly die, or you or they become disabled through disease or accident, would you look back on these years when you're young, healthy, and secure enough to enjoy life to the fullest with those you love, and say "Gosh, I sure am glad I spent those extra years working!"

My wife is 14 years older than me - I know our time together will feel very short, when it is over. I retired when I could, much younger than the usual age. I do not regret it.

Crunch the numbers and do it! (Some financial sites have Monte Carlo simulations to help you; although I'm a bit sceptical of their methodology and data.)

Since retiring, I've lost 15kg, probably due to less stress (and my last employer - Google - was one of the best). And I haven't had any problem finding things to do (e.g., catching up on reading, joining a bicycling club, doing some travelling).

I enjoy retirement because I always had a goal to return to music. I am too old to chase fans, contracts, Big Time, etc., but I can write better than ever and do like poring over YouTube stats. YouTube took away the money and keeps removing features so wah wah but free server space is free server space. Only being a musician again as I was long long ago has been wonderful. I wish I didn't have the medical issues that are steadily worsening, but that's the luck of the gene pool lottery. So, no regrets.

That said, if you don't have a passion and a plan, keep your day job. Neuroscience is fairly clear about the brain when you turn down the gain. You are a much more social critter than I am. You need the feed.

You could use some of that fortune opening a small room, maybe a coffee house, whatever, and put that busking musician to work plus others. Get a staff of teen-agers. You might really enjoy it, you still get to program, and maybe pay back some of what was lost to musicians when the web took away the money. Help them navigate the streaming services, show them how to setup their web sites, get in the game.

I tried reducing my hours as "partial retirement" and also tried a "staycation". Neither helped me get a feeling for retirement. There's something different about being 100% irrevocably removed from work. YMMV, of course.

You should definitely have a plan for something to do, even if it's just volunteering one or two days a week.

My parents and mother in law have been keeping busy in retirement and are doing well. My father in law was forced into retirement in 2008 and never found something to replace work. It's depressing to see how quickly he has mentally gone downhill.

I am semi-retired. But I still have to earn a bit more money than what comes in from my 'retirement'.

Having much more money would make retirement much better, much sweeter. Don't know if I will ever be able to "totally retire" because of that.

The best part of my 'semi-retirement' is the luxury it affords me to pursue looking things up that interest me, and going more towards the 'end' of those interests—so that I more fully understand things my curiosity drives me to know.

It also has allowed me, thereby, to ponder things deeper. So many issues that both individuals have, as do nations, are taken too much for granted. We assume too much. Most of our major problems now would not be there, if we better understood the cause of them, and then took the appropriate action, or made the appropriate behavioral response, IMHO.

I've started to have somewhat similar thoughts of late as I've gone through various organizational changes. They turned out to be neutral to positive but they did get me thinking semi-seriously about what I would do if I ended up in a situation not really to my liking.

That said, I'm pretty happy with what I'm doing, at least some of which I'd probably keep on doing even if I weren't being paid for it. More and longer vacations would always be nice but I really can't complain about how I've been able to dovetail various activities with work travel over the past few years.

There's also the social aspect. I work remotely most of the time but I can always go into the office and there are also all the events I attend.

I tried to retire in Feb 2017. And since then, I have been working 7 days a week helping people. And I do most of this work at home, and I have a bit of time for my own projects. So all the reasons for retiring that you mentioned are valid, and most of the reasons for staying at AMZ are not valid. The one big reason in favour of staying at work seems to be the team that you are working with. This is hard to get and may be worth preserving for a few more years, but I wonder if it is real. I have almost never seen a great IT team (you may be extra nice here because they read your blog). I worked in IT since 1973 and almost all teams were awful, really awful; IT people can be so bad. Now, since I officially retired, the teams are much better. Smaller and better and less competitive. I am sure that you have great projects and I think that you would have much fun doing them, and they would be much more valuable to the world than the work that you are doing now. Some months ago, a friend of mine got brain cancer, and it could happen to anyone. You don't know how much time you have to do your fun projects. Hope this helps.

That's really all you need to decide that, yes, you should retire. To echo Rich Sands, you have energy and your health right now and that won't last forever.

You have a lot of hobbies, a lot of interests and know a lot of people. Get those plans in place and retire ASAP.

If, for some reason, you don't like it, don't worry. The computing industry isn't going to solve all the interesting problems while you're away for 5 to 10 years. (Ha: if they do, the shock would surely kill us all :)

I'm not young, and I'll never be able to afford to retire, despite saving 20% of income for the last 30 years. So I must confess to some envy here ;-)

As long as the job is interesting, rewarding for you personally, and doesn't consume the rest of your life, I'd be inclined to keep on. But your point 4 in reasons to, suggests that it is consuming the rest of your life..

Perhaps it is possible in Canada to negotiate a part-time status. In the US it's not usually possible, since the cost to the company of benefits for anyone working over 20 hours per week, is staggering. Those positions are always the first ones eliminated, so tend to be insecure and short term.

My wife tried to do this when we had kids, and hasn't been able to find IT employment since then.

Well, its the creepingness/frog-in-a-pot-of-water part of the evil, how do you know when enough is enough? "cap­i­tal­is­m, flac­cid la­bor laws, and lame an­titrust en­force­men­t" is one thing, but marketing "Rekognition" facial recognition systems to the cops, ICE, & the TSA, putting AWS on the other side of the fence from the ALCU, might be another. (If the Chinese can optimize for Uighers and Tibetans, I'm sure AWS can optimize for Latinos Arabs and Africans...)

That seems qualitatively different from exploiting seniors in dark satanic mills ahem "fulfillment centres." And it is not the warehouse industry standard level exploitation done by Amazon, it is specifically high tech AWS doing it. And one has to wonder what the next thing after that will be.

But of course, if AWS doesn't do it, someone else will, amiright? Maybe the Chinese. Maybe we are at the software industry's Oppenheimer moment, and now you too have known sin.

But I'm a fine one to be talking. Yesterday I enjoyed a most excellent lunch courtesy of a big pharma sales team, and paid for it by listening to a kinda frightening sales pitch for very powerful, very very expensive, invasively administered psychiatric meds. Which are often legally compulsory for patients.

I'm thinking of one thing I haven't seen raised by others so far. About finding something to do: Yes, it's very important. I feel that there are currently a large number of Big Issues at all levels: local, regional, provincial, national, and international which are largely not commercial in nature and which need helpers. If you agree, you might be able to think of some. And frankly, for many of the issues, as a rich white man you might be able to lend quite a lot more legitimacy.

That in such cases you might have more luck than in a Bigtechco to declare that you're only able to contribute 20 hours per week is only a bonus.

I am 10 years behind you, and have been following you since Textuality.

I am amazed at your continuing level of enthusiasm for tech. Mine oscillates, I feel annoyed with much of technology that I encounter. The enthusiasm for all tech has been replaced by weariness.

If you are still that excited, that does not feel like retirement. Maybe a different role, a different company, where reading Feedly for 3 hours in the morning fits in.

I took 10 years easy after my kids were born (retirement preview). To keep myself sane, I tried to find low-intensity work. I did not care about income, but I needed intellectual exercise. I'd pick a problem I care about (election reform, elderly care), and search AngelList for startups in that space, and offer my help. They often took me up on it. It was never as fun as working at Google/Netscape/etc, I'd get into "you're doing tech wrong" fights a lot.

I think it is really hard to find low-intensity work that is also interesting. Looking forward to reading about your future adventures.

I also wonder about how long will I last in the industry. Hopefully, when I am truly sick of it, grandkids! And then I can become master cook/babysitter in my old age.

"Pro­gres­sive friend­s give me shit about work­ing for Ama­zon": of course they do, tech has real power now, and each one of our warts is examined closely. And no one is perfect...

I will be eligible for the CPP in a few months and people keep asking me when I'm going to retire. They look puzzled when I say something like "Why would I do that?"

I don't work in tech and there's a lot less money at play in the equation for me than for some. It mostly comes down to the fact that my work is the most interesting thing that I do, that I care about its outcomes for the people I work with and for and I don't feel like I'm done doing the stuff I want to get done.

I get the tired thing, especially when we hit a rough patch, but that's just life as a geezer, retired or not. For me the main complication is the fact that our working lives mean that my wife and I spend too much time apart. If I retire, I imagine that will be the reason. I also suspect that with her retirement projects and mine we will still spend a lot of time doing our own things until neither of us can get around anymore and we spend our days reminiscing about things that may or may not actually be memories.

Not sure if there's any advice buried in there anywhere, so I'm tempted to weigh in on cap­i­tal­is­m, flac­cid la­bour laws, and lame an­titrust en­force­men­t...